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No stopping Steven Bennie
By Avinash Nair
BANGALORE, AUG. 23. The `Scottish hurricane' Steven Bennie
brooked no stopping. And even the otherwise dour and defiant T.J.
Dowling of the Republic of Ireland could only grin and bear it.
Steven was on a roll, zooming off to a 4-0 lead before easing on
the throttle and Dowling threaded the loose ends only to be
stuffed out. Steven won 5-2 at 62-54, 78-56, 59-19, 77-1, 39-66,
40-65, 68-0 to romp into the last eight of the Kheladi.com 12th
World under-21 snooker championship at the KSBA hall here today.
Joining Steven in the round of eight was second-seeded Luke
Fisher, who quelled the challenge from India's junior National
champion Rishab Thukral at 5-3 after being 1-3 down, while Sean
O'Neill (Northern Ireland) and Johan D'hondt (Belgium) ruffled a
few feathers easing past Robert Murphy (Rep. of Ireland) and
Suphachai Wiwatarangkoon (Thailand).
Steven potted from far and near and Dowling turned a mere
spectator. Not that Steven came up with any big breaks, since he
has a penchant for century breaks having notched up five already.
But with 40s and 50s coming easily there was not much Dowling
could do. But as has been his wont, after taking a commanding
lead the Scot tends to relax and Dowling was quick to win two
frames on the run. But that was as far as he could get.
Shrugging aside his complacency, Steven came back roaring and a
68-0 with a long pot `red' saw Dowling shake his head and
opponent's hand.
Rishab falters
Rishab too had a brilliant start. Off the blocks in a jiffy,
Rishab rattled his fancied rival with some steady potting and
shrewd safeties. A 60 followed by a 53 gave Rishab a handsome
124-1 win in the first frame. Although the Englishman fought back
to clinch the second, Rishab was not to lose his grip. That was
until the fourth frame, as he won 104-1 and 55-45 for the next
two. That was it.
Luke as he has proved time and again in the league has this
uncanny knack of bouncing back when forced to the wall. And this
afternoon too, he did just that which not only threw Rishab off
the charge but had his supporters dumbfounded. A 51 and a 64
followed in quick succession and Luke was 4-3 up.
It was Rishab's turn to pull a rabbit out of the hat. But it was
not to be, as the ball rolled well for Luke who came up with 74
again, to wrap up the match.
Johan D'hondt is one player who given a chance would seize it
with both hands. And Thailand's title contender Suphachai
Wiwatarangkoon learnt it the hard way. The no-nonsense 20-year-
old from Belgium, with a stiff upper-lip, pulled off a
sensational 5-4 win over the Thai, after first levelling scores
at 4-4 with a black ball play-off.
Suphachai looked like he had it all wrapped up after coming back
from the loss of the first two frames. But Johan fought back
gallantly. With a break of 39 Johan led 50-22 only to watch in
awe as the Thai, with a potential that would match that of his
famed countryman - James Wattanna - came up with a clearance of
28 to tie the scores at 50-all. But a poor break in the black
ball play-off enabled the Belgian convert a difficult angle to
level scores at 4-4.
In the decider again a couple of fouls with the cue ball gave
Johan a big early lead which he hung on to with `bitsy' breaks to
clinch the frame (72-46) and match.
Rory McCarrell, alongwith the bespectacled Sean O'Neill of
Northern Ireland, made it a double treat for his country. While
ironically there is no representation from the Republic of
Ireland in the quarterfinals.
Rory was overwhelmingly superior to the `beefy' Aussie Ian Barber
winning 5-2, while Sean O'Neill staved off a determined Robert
Murphy (Rep. Of Ireland) 5-4. Robert, a finalist in 1998, matched
his Northern Ireland rival frame for frame. But in the decider
caved under a superb 75 from Sean, with two reds and the colours
still on the table.
``Going for a century break was least of my interest. Did not
want to surrender the initiative,`` said the soft-spoken 19-year-
old, Sean from Belfast.
Rory on the other hand had starting trouble. But once he found
his fluency, there was no looking back, although Barber did
manage to pull one frame back.
Ben Farnworth, the second seed from New Zealand, also had to ward
off a stiff challenge from the last of the Thai brigade - Kobkit
Palajin before advancing at 5-4.
Kevin Tang, the lanky Singaporean was another to record a fluent
5-1 win over Pakistan's Md. Atiq after David John (Wales) snuffed
out the challenge from the Netherlands' GerritBij de Leij at 5-2.
The quarterfinal line-up: Steven Bennie vs David John; Johan
D'hondt vs Rory McCarrell; Luke Fisher vs Sean O'Neill; Kevin
Tang vs Ben Farnworth.
lThe results (pre- quarterfinals): David John (Wal) bt Gerrit Bij
de Leij (Ned) 5-2 (63-58, 93-0, 38-70, 23-74, 71-9, 80-32, 66-
29); Kevin Tang (Sin) bt Md. Atiq (Pak) 5-1 (85-22, 38-61, 69-34,
74- 67, 76-11, 70-25); Johan D'hondt (Bel) bt Suphachai
Wiwatarangkoon (Tha) 5-4 (71-34, 63-26, 0-92, 32-77, 12-69, 62-
55, 18-70, 57-50, 72-46); Sean O'Neill (N. Ire) bt Robert Murphy
(Rep. of Ire) 5-4 (43-59, 101-43, 74-5, 21-58, 80-20, 47-69, 77-
39, 41-71, 76-11); Rory McCarrell (N. Ire) bt Ian Barber (Aus) 5-
2 (38-54, 57-29, 70-8, 86-1, 29-61, 64-22, 87-19); Steven Bennie
(Sco) bt T.J. Dowling (Rep. of Ire) 5-2 (62-54, 78-56, 59-19, 77-
1, 39-66, 40-65, 68-0); Luke Fisher (Eng) bt Rishab Thukral (Ind)
5-3 (1-124, 70-49, 1-104, 45-55, 71-43, 73-40, 75-44, 77-24); Ben
Farnworth (NZ) bt Kobkit Palajin (Tha) 5-4 (74-10, 45-55, 26-77,
85-24, 44-98, 81-36, 106-7, 36-75, 70-63).
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